The TED Talk “My
Underwater Robot” by David Lang talks about deep-sea exploration with ROVs,
remote operated vehicles. David Lang began his business in underwater robotics
because of his curiosity of the unknown. He has created ROVs with inexpensive
parts, but the ROVs can still produce live, clear video. He has not secluded
the design for a profit but has freely posted all of his codes and parts online
for others to give feedback on and improve his designs. David Lang is a prime
example of someone who doesn’t care about money or fame, but wants to further
the human understanding of the unknown. He is spreading the ideas of deep-sea
exploration using ROVs and is gathering a following all around the world
containing curious explorers who collectively want to improve the future and understanding
of our world. He created a Kickstarter to raise money for shipping kits
explaining how to make ROVs. David Lang has received many videos and photos
from people sending images seen by the ROVs. ROVs are becoming more common in
exploration to search and retrieve samples from extreme places in which humans
could not survive. If people work together as a scientific community and not
for personal profit, we could fully understand our world and all of its
surfaces and minerals in a matter of years. ROVs act as an extension to the
human eye by seeing and recording sights and phenomena we could not possibly see. Hopefully ROVs will soon be cheaply created
to explore the outer reaches of our solar system and, eventually, our galaxy.
Monday, January 13, 2014
Thursday, November 14, 2013
Hamlet's Renaissance Journey
Hamlet, a
talented painter, lives in the heart of Venice during its prime, the Renaissance.
Hamlet is a young artist whose apprentices, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, have
betrayed him and have sided with Hamlet’s new patron, Claudius. But before
Claudius had entered Hamlet’s life, his mother, Gertrude, was only a lowly
potter years ago with a brave warrior husband. Then everything changed when
Hamlet’s father was killed in combat and Claudius, who attends many of the
fallen soldiers’ funerals, noticed a beautiful potter who was now a widow. At
that moment, Claudius decided to ease her pain with wealth and love by marrying
her and giving the poor young artist, Hamlet, a real career. At least, this is
what Hamlet believed. He soon realized, due to his father’s ghost, that
Claudius had killed Hamlet’s father and threw him into a battlefield to make it
see as if Hamlet’s father died in combat. He murdered Hamlet’s father because a
couple of days before the murder, Claudius had passed by the bread lines where
free bread was handed out to the poor who could not afford food and saw the most
beautiful and attractive women he had ever seen. Once Hamlet learns of his
father’s murder, his life changes radically.
After Hamlet’s encounter with his father’s ghost, he decides to act insane so no one suspects him on any future actions and so people would leave him alone to plan the revenge and murder of his patron Claudius. To keep people away from him and to fool his patron into thinking he has gone crazy, Hamlet meets up with the daughter to the treasurer of Claudius, Ophelia. Ophelia’s father, the treasurer, Polonius, has recently forbidden her to speak to her love, Hamlet, in fear she might fall to deeply in love. Ophelia defies her father to meet with Hamlet, but he is not what she expects. Before she can say a word of how much she loves him, Hamlet whips out a paintbrush and begins to paint her on the wall. He doesn’t respond to any of her questions and has a crazed look in his eyes. As Hamlet paints, Ophelia notices his colors don’t match and his portrait looks amateurish, and she looks deformed. Hamlet, as she knew him, was a perfectionist and wanted everything to match. Ophelia knew something was wrong with him and fled as he breathed heavly and continued to scratch the wall with his dry, colorless paintbrush.
Sunday, November 3, 2013
The Struggle
In Oliver’s Hamlet film (1948), the “To be or not to be”
soliloquy portrays Hamlet contemplating his own fate at the ocean’s edge.
Hamlet speaks slowly, carefully to show how he is making one of the greatest
decisions of his life and to make sure every word is with purpose and strong
meaning. His voice makes every word thump in your mind like a heart, beating.
Hamlet’s distant glare expresses himself deep in thought, deciding whether to
sin, commit suicide, or to continue living his miserable life. Oliver mainly
focused on the auditory portrayal of the speech while Kenneth Branagh focuses
on the visual portrayal of the speech.
Kenneth Branagh portrays Hamlet’s “To be or not to be”
soliloquy in King Claudius’ home. Hamlet, like Oliver’s Hamlet, speaks slowly
to emphasize the importance of each word but also uses visual means to depict
the soliloquy. The mirror Hamlet stares into during the speech shows his
indecisiveness in deciding his own fate because he uses his reflection to watch
himself and judge if he deserves to live or die. He later pulls out his dagger
and taps the mirror as if wanting to strike himself down yet knowing he cannot.
While Hamlet emphasizes his words with a slow, carefull tone, he still uses
visuals to get his main interpretation across.
In my opinion, Branagh’s display of Hamlet’s “To be or not
to be” soliloquy truly encapsulated Hamlet’s struggle to either kill himself or
continue living his tortuous life. Branagh’s Hamlet not only convinced me
Hamlet was making one of the biggest decisions of his life but also showed me
the reasonability of Hamlet and his powerful words.
Monday, October 28, 2013
The Ironic End of "Harrison Bergeron" Revised Intro
“Harrison Bergeron”, written by Kurt Vonnegut, is a short
story that tells of the ironic shortcomings of a seemingly perfect man who dies
in the hands of his suppressive American government in 2081. Harrison Bergeron,
born in a nation that makes equality the main focus of life, defies his
oppressive government on live television by tearing off his handicaps that
weigh him down and cloud his handsome figure. The suppresive government fights
back by shooting him. Using Harrison Bergeron, Vonnegut toys with our
expectations of the story’s end by adding irony to Harrison Bergeron’s actions
to comment to those who believe that all civilizations should primarily focus
on equality. Vonnegut uses Harrison Bergeron to show his audience how irony can
change one’s perception of the future, and how irony can be used to show the
hidden truth behind the clouded expectations.
“Harrison Bergeron”, a short story written by Kurt Vonnegut,
tells of a seemingly perfect man who ironically dies at the hands of his oppressive
American government in 2081. Harrison Bergeron, born in a nation that makes
equality the main focus of life, defies his oppressive government by tearing
off his handicaps to show the world that a government created around equality hinders
progress and the drive to shine above rest. The oppressive American government
fights back by shooting him on live television to show everyone that death is
the result of inequality. Vonnegut toys with our expectations throughout the
story by portraying Harrison Bergeron as an incredible, indestructable hero who
can defy a nation and its rules but is killed in an instant by a handicapped
woman with a shotgun. Using Harrison Bergeron, Vonnegut shows his audience that
if equality became the main focus of government, progress stalls, and we lose
our greatest advantage above all other creatures, our imagination.
Monday, October 14, 2013
Fear and Love of a Familiar Face
Monday, October 7, 2013
Deception Within the Throne

Friday, October 4, 2013
The Ironic End of “Harrison Bergeron”
“Harrison Bergeron”, written by Kurt Vonnegut, is a short story that tells of the ironic shortcomings of a seemingly perfect man who dies in the hands of his suppressive American government in 2081. Harrison Bergeron, born in a nation that makes equality the main focus of life, defies his suppressive government on live television by tearing off his handicaps that weigh him down and cloud his handsome figure. The suppressive government fights back by making his perfect body equal to everyone else’s by shooting him. Using Harrison Bergeron, Vonnegut toys with our expectations of the story’s end by adding irony to Harrison Bergeron’s actions to comment to those who believe that all civilizations should primarily focus on equality. Vonnegut uses Harrison Bergeron to show his audience how irony can change one’s perception of the future, and how irony can be used to show the hidden truth behind the clouded expectations.
In Harrison Bergeron’s world, equality is treated as the focus of civilization, and through suppression and handicaps, people are forced to be average and equal. As for Harrison Bergeron’s parents, his father, George, has a device in his ear that transmits a noise to make it hard to concentrate and remember, and his mother, Hazel, is an average woman who has little to no handicaps. For Harrison Bergeron, Vonnegut creates a world in which his individuality cannot be expressed by law and are looked down upon to the point in which he cannot contain himself, and he dies trying to become emperor. These handicaps and suppresion show us that in Harrison Bergeron’s world, people are controlled and forced to not be the best that they can be by the government. Vonnegut wants us to see that any revolt against these laws is against the norm and can result in severe punishment.
Vonnegut’s set up of this world, where equality is valued above all else, leads into an ironic end where Harrison Bergeron dies, and his parents, because of their handicaps, can’t remember that their son was shot and killed on live TV. Using the fact that equality is treated above all else, Vonnegut creates many instances of tragic irony that seem harsher than most life in America today . One example of irony would be when Harrison Bergeron declares himself emperor and tears off his disabilities but dies in the end, leaving his parents heart broken until their disabilities make them forget what they just saw and their sorrow. Geroge asks his wife, “‘You been crying?’ he said to Hazel. / ‘Yup,’ she said, / ‘What about?’ he said. / ‘I forget,’ she said” (Vonnegut 6). This excerpt shows that no matter how terrible or how hard people try to remember their handicaps stop them from thinking too deeply into sadness and the flaws of their government. The parents’ forgetfulness of this tragic moment shows that the government, making equality the highest priority, doesn’t make families and neighbors stronger; it hurts and weakens them to the point that people can’t remember that their own child has just died. On a broader scale than just the Bergerons, Americans all wanted equality so badly that they sacrificed everything for it. Ironically, the desire for equality caused the dearth of freedom for all Americans and the suppression of individuality and imagination. Americans were giving up the morals that made them great for the imaginative idea of equality. Vonnegut uses these examples of irony to twist our perception of the ending and show us, in Vonnegut’s opinion, the true path that a government based upon equality will go.
Vonnegut uses the irony within “Harrison Bergeron” as a tool to make a comment to those who believe equality should be the focus of any civilization. Vonnegut uses irony as a tool to show us that our expectations might lead us astray and the truth might be what we least expect. With irony, he tells a story of how a nation, once prosperous with great minds and inventors, can be changed so dramatically for what all thought was the “greater good”. This misperception of the “greater good” is what Vonnegut is trying to tell those who believe pure equality is the key to happiness. Today, we live in a innovative democracy, while Harrison Bergeron lives in a suppressive oligarchy within the same nation and land but within different times and different morals.
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